South Africa

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12 Sep 2016
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Roughly seven million people are living with HIV in South Africa

In South Africa, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) supports innovations for change in HIV and tuberculosis (TB) treatment, care for victims of sexual violence and access to lifesaving drugs.

In 2018, South Africa became the first country in the world to make the oral drug bedaquiline part of its standard recommended treatment for drug-resistant TB (DR-TB), helping to phase out painful, toxic injections and scale up access to more effective, more tolerable treatments – a long-standing MSF goal.

[[Country-Facts]]

MSF's work in South Africa: 2018

 

HIV and TB treatment

We are working to increase access to new and repurposed drugs and community-based care for patients with DR-TB through our HIV and TB projects in Khayelitsha, near Cape Town, and King Cetshwayo district, KwaZulu-Natal, while supporting efforts to reach the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets for people living with HIV.

In 2018, we conducted a door-to-door HIV survey through our project in King Cetshwayo district. The preliminary results endorsed the innovative community-based strategies we have implemented since 2011 to reduce HIV and TB incidence, sickness and mortality. In 2018, 22,780 people were tested in the community for HIV and 1,280 were started on TB treatment, including 220 on bedaquiline and/or delamanid.

In Khayelitsha, we enrolled 198 mother and baby pairs in postnatal support clubs, designed to improve care for women with HIV and their HIV-exposed infants. The programme was piloted in 2016 and incorporated into the national HIV treatment guidelines a year later.

South Africa also became part of the multi-country endTB clinical trial aiming to find shorter, less toxic and more effective treatment regimens for multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB). We launched the trial in Khayelitsha in May and had enrolled 28 patients by the end of the year.

Care for victims of sexual violence

In Bojanala district, in South Africa’s platinum mining belt, we are helping to expand access to care for victims of sexual and gender-based violence through four dedicated clinics, known as Kgomotso Care Centres, which offer medical and mental healthcare, and social services.

An increasing number of patients are being referred from community-based initiatives, including a school health programme, through which we conducted education sessions reaching 12,670 pupils in 20 schools. Around 27 pupils a month were referred to our care centres in 2018.

We also continue to support termination of pregnancy services for women who request them. Two MSF nurses performed 90 to 100 procedures a month in two community health centres in 2018.

Stop Stockouts Project (SSP)

The SSP is a civil society consortium supported by MSF and five other organisations, which monitors the availability of essential drugs in clinics across the country and pushes for the rapid resolution of stockouts and shortages. In 2018, the SSP helped to identify and raise awareness of stockouts across North West province resulting from health worker strike action.

Find out more in our 2018 International Activity Report

21,000
PEOPLE TREATED FOR HIV
1,430
PEOPLE STARTED ON TREATMENT FOR TB
550
PEOPLE TREATED AFTER INCIDENTS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE
282
STAFF IN 2018